
Current & Recent Research at Penn LawThe Penn Law faculty are engaged in a wide array of scholarship in traditional, cross-disciplinary and cutting-edge areas of inquiry. This newly created section of our website, which we will continue to populate in the months ahead, gives you access and the ability to search current and earlier work. FEATURED RESEARCHQuick Links: 15 Most Recent | 15 Most Viewed | RSS Feeds | Search SEARCHEnter search criteria in one or more of the following fields.
21 publications matched your search.
A Chinese Solution?: Development without Democracy and the Turn to Law, in the P.R.C., in DEVELOPMENT AND DEMOCRACY: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON AN OLD DEBATE 252 (Sunder Ramaswamy & Jeffrey W. Cason eds., University Press of New England 2003).
Atypical Pneumonia and Ambivalent Law and Politics: SARS and the Response to SARS in China, 77 TEMP. L. REV. 193 (2004).
CHINA UNDER HU JINTAO: OPPORTUNITIES, DANGERS, AND DILEMMAS (with Tun-jen Cheng and Deborah Brown eds., Word Scientific Publishing 2006).
China's Approach to International Law: A Historical Perspective, 94 AM. SOC'Y INT'L L. PROC. 267 (2000).
Development without Democratization? China, Law and the East Asian Model, in DEMOCRATIZATIONS: COMPARISONS, CONFRONTATIONS AND CONTRASTS (Jose V. Ciprut ed., 2008).
Eroding the “One China” Policy: A Tripartite Legal-Political Strategy for Taiwan, in RESHAPING THE TAIWAN STRAIT (John Tkacik ed., 2007).
Foreign Policy and Constitutional Change in China, ORBIS (forthcoming 2007) (with Cheng Li).
Human Rights, Civil Wrongs and Foreign Relations: A 'Sinical' Look at the Use of U.S. Litigation to Address Human Rights Abuses Abroad, 52 DEPAUL L. REV. 473 (2003).
Humanitarian Intervention: Legality, Morality, and the Good Samaritan, vol. 45, no. 3 ORBIS 535 (2001).
International Pressures and Domestic Pushback, in POLITICAL CHANGE IN CHINA: COMPARISONS WITH TAIWAN (Bruce Gilley & Larry Diamond eds., 2008).
Legalization without Democratization in China under Hu Jintao, in CHINA AFTER THE 17TH PARTY CONGRESS (Cheng Li, ed., forthcoming 2007).
Legalization without Democratization in China under Hu Jintao, in CHINA’S CHANGING POLITICAL LANDSCAPE (Cheng Li ed., 2008).
Legislating the Cross-Strait Status Quo?: China’s Anti-Secession Law, Taiwan’s Constitutional Reform, and the U.S.’s Taiwan Relations Act, in POWER AND PRINCIPLE: US, CHINA AND TAIWAN TRIANGULAR RELATIONS (Peter Chow ed., Edward Elgar Publishing 2006).
SARS and the Pathologies of Globalization and Transition in Greater China, vol. 47, no. 4 ORBIS 587 (2003).
Taiwan’s Constitutional Reform: Implications for Cross-Strait Relations and International Status, ORBIS (forthcoming 2007) (with Vincent Wang).
The China-Taiwan Relationship: Law's Spectral Answers to the Cross-Strait Sovereignty Question, vol 46, no. 4 ORBIS 733 (Fall 2002).
The Chinese Puzzle of Taiwan's Status, vol. 44, no. 1 ORBIS 35 (2000).
The Common Law of Causation in Tort and Questions of Policy and Institutions in the Development of Chinese Tort Law, LEGAL MATERIALS J. (in Chinese) (2004).
The Roles of Law in the War on Terrorism, vol. 46, no. 2, ORBIS 301 (2002).
Traps, Gaps and Law in China’s Transition, in OXFORD FOUNDATION FOR LAW, JUSTICE AND SOCIETY POLICY BRIEF (2007).
“One World, Different Dreams”: The Contest to Define the Beijing Olympics, in OWNING THE OLYMPICS (Monroe Price & Daniel Dayan eds., 2008).
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